
I was sad to hear that Mark Lewis (Marcus in the Morning) passed away. I listened to him going back so many years that I no longer remember the exact date. My kids would dial Marcus on the air and ask if there was going to be school.
The radio station was undoubtedly inundated with such calls. Gunnar and Miranda got a kick out of it, and Marcus seemed to take things in good humor.
One year, around the same time as the Iditarod Sled Dog race, someone came up with a wacky idea to have the “IditaTok.” This was supposed to be a pot-smoking extravaganza, but if I remember right, it was quickly shut down by police.
From that point on, I’d call Marcus each year around the start of Iditarod, and in a stoner voice, ask if he knew when the IditaTok was happening. He put me on the air several times, and I had to bite my gums to keep from cracking up. My fictitious name was “Rocky,” and I lived in Talkeetna. This was before caller ID.
When radio stations got the ability to see who was calling, I immediately ceased my joke. A good friend of Mark, Kurt Rogers, worked with me. I told him what I’d been doing for many years, and with Kurt’s creative help, we came up with a complex plan to continue things.
I’d write letters or cards and send them to friends in other states, inside another envelope, with them agreeing to forward the correspondence to Marcus, either at KFQD or KYMG radio, or later, at KTUU.
I knew some things about Mark and his family from Kurt, as well as our oldest boy, Gunnar, who went to a daycare on Turpin Road with Mark’s daughter, Heather.
The letters or cards addressed from “Rocky” with a bogus address often referred to a black Chevrolet Camaro Mark once owned. Of course, IditaTok was always brought up.
Some of Rocky’s addresses included prisons, trailer parks, and shelters for single men. In one letter, Rocky disclosed that he hit the jackpot in Vegas but quickly lost it.
This was a complex ruse, and I always kept Kurt up to speed. Jack Frost’s name was also brought up in the correspondence because Jack was a friend of my father. I made sly references to Marcus that Jack had supposedly backed into the Camaro and kept it secret.
For close to 20 years, this punking went on, even several years after Kurt passed away. There came a time that I decided to let the cat out of the bag, and through Michael Dougherty, one of Mark’s closest friends, the story was told.
I guess the joke had been driving Marcus and his co-host, April, bonkers. Kurt always told me that Mark would see things in good humor when he found out, and I’m glad he did.
Anchorage will never be the same with Mark’s passing. When God made him, he added an extra amount of humor and creativity. We were all blessed by it.
Prayers to his wife, children, and grandchildren!
Michael Hankins
Lake Havasu City, Arizona

















